![]() I’ve had so many people reach out and talk about how we were such a great team. One person on Instagram started out with the hashtag “VoteForPedro” and it caught absolute fire and everybody started using it. “A lot of people asked me if I wanted to sell my horse or where he came from,” Gordon said. Her horse, “Pedro,” also became a star of the show. “I think it helped me adapt and work well with everybody.” ![]() “I do think that having experience in both worlds helped me a lot because I can kind of understand where the rodeo-type guys are coming from and where the cowboy ranch guys were coming from,” Gordon said. Gordon has a lifetime of experience in both. She did avoid much of the drama on the show between contestants, some of which stemmed between cowboys who worked on ranches and cowboys from the rodeo circuit. “I didn’t necessarily want to be the leader, but if no one else wanted to, I didn’t mind stepping up into that role.” “I would just read the situation and when somebody else wasn’t stepping up, there had to be a leader every single day because you can’t just have a bunch of Indians running around with nobody to guide us,” Gordon said. Gordon was not afraid to step up to take a leadership role and therefore put a target on herself if something went wrong. men or anything like that, it was just that we were all cowboys and that we did our jobs.” I wanted people to see it wasn’t just women vs. I feel like we kind of deserve equality and the whole thing because we are capable as women in the industry. My label shouldn’t be anything different than theirs. ![]() “I don’t want everybody to be like, ‘Well, you know, she had to work extra hard or she played the girl card,’ or this or that. “Yeah, honestly, to me it was just, we’re all the same,” Gordon said. While that accomplishment is not lost on her, she just saw herself as being a cowboy like any of the male competitors. She was the first woman to win an immunity challenge in either season and she was the first woman to win the overall competition. ![]() It’s going to be a nice change for sure and I’m excited about it.”īesides being the season two winner, Gordon became the first in a couple of ways. “To go out there with Dylan and going out there to work on our own on something we’ve been working so hard for. “Seeing that cattle is going to be a nice thing,” Gordon said. They are working on buying a piece of property in the Addington area for the cattle. The main prize was $50,000 worth of cattle. “I knew I had performed well and stayed true to myself throughout the whole thing, but I didn’t know if it was going to be enough because he did the same thing and he was an awesome guy, so I was just flabbergasted when he said my name and I was like, ‘Oh, yeah!’” She had spent several years living and working at her parents’ ranch in Ryan before marrying her husband and Ryan is listed as her hometown on the show. It ended up going the way of Gordon, who lives outside of Comanche with her husband Dylan. We were in a tight race and at that moment in time, I knew it could go either way, so I was extremely nervous there.” was such a hard competitor,” Gordon said in a zoom interview with The Comanche Times. “In my mind, I was going, ‘Holy crap.’ I just didn’t know what he was going to say honestly because J.P. Kijac was the first to be eliminated, leaving just Gordon and Gonzales.Īfter briefly talking to each one, Adkins paused several seconds after saying, “the Ultimate Cowboy Showdown is” and then naming Gordon the winner. Gordon had worked her way through each challenge and found herself standing in the season finale with John Paul “J.P.” Gonzales of south Texas and Tyler Kijac of Jay, Oklahoma by way of Michigan. Katey Jo Gordon beat out 13 other cowboys to win the title of the Ultimate Cowboy when show host Trace Adkins named her the “Ultimate Cowboy Showdown,” champion on the INSP network last Wednesday.
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